GLR January-February 2026
IN MEMORIAM
Remembering a Few Who Made a Difference I N KEEPING with tradition, we take time to remember a few of the notable LGBT people who died during the pre vious year. —J EREMY C. F OX
writers such as James Bald win, Amiri Baraka, Lorraine Hansberry, and Audre Lorde. In her early career, Giovanni wrote stirringly about racism and formed her own publish ing company because, she wrote: “No one was much in terested in a Black girl writ ing what was called ‘militant’ poetry.” Giovanni also wrote hon estly and humorously about her ambivalence toward rela tions between men and
J ONATHAN B RACKER was a poet who wrote with insight and humor about the natural world, growing up gay in the pre Stonewall era, and in recent years about aging, death, and grief. His poem “A Suggestion for Gays” was published in the No vember-December 2025 issue of TheG&LR . Bracker was born in New York City, grew up in Louisiana
and Texas, and began writing poetry in junior high school. He later studied creative writ ing at the University of Texas at Austin under the poet Fred erick Eckman. He went on to teach at colleges in Texas, Pennsylvania, Indiana, and California, settling in San Francisco in 1973. He was the editor of Bright Cages: Se lected Poems of Christopher Morley (1965) and co-author
women, writing in the poem “Housecleaning”: “i always liked housecleaning/ even as a child … and unfortunately this habit has/ carried over and I find/ i must remove you/ from my life.” She gave birth to a son, Thomas, in 1969 and never publicly disclosed the father’s identity. She taught at Queens College and Rutgers University before being recruited to Virginia Tech by English professor Virginia C. Fowler, who became a scholar of Giovanni’s work, her biographer, and her life partner. They married in 2016. Giovanni died at age 81 from complications of lung cancer in a Blacksburg, Virginia, hospital in December 2024. M ISS M AJOR G RIFFIN -G RACY was among the protesters out side the Stonewall Inn in 1969 and went on to a half-century career in activism for Black trans women, incarcerated trans women, and people with HIV/AIDS. Miss Major moved to New York City in 1962 after being expelled from two colleges for wearing dresses, and soon began performing in drag shows and doing sex work to survive. A year after a cop knocked her unconscious at Stonewall, she was convicted of robbery and sent to a men’s prison. While behind bars, she endured brutal treatment and met a leader of the 1971 Attica prison uprising, which led to her advocacy for trans prisoners. Miss Major provided direct care for people with HIV/AIDS in New York in the early 1980s; founded a home healthcare service, Angels of Care, in San Diego; and later led
of a 1976 biography of Morley. His thirteen poetry collections include Constellations of Clover (1973), Some Poems About Women (1993), Paris Sketches (2005), Civilian Aboard U.S. Navy Ship at Sea (2011), and Love Poems of a Gay Nerd (2022). Bracker died at age 88 at a rehabilitation facility in San Francisco due to complications following heart surgery. A NDREA G IBSON was a genderqueer spoken-word poet, per formance artist, and activist whose work moved audiences across the spectrums of gender and sexuality. Their passion ate, sometimes sardonic, often political poems about gender, patriarchy, love, basketball, and gun control emerged from the traditions of slam poetry, a form that Gibson helped reinvigo rate on college campuses and in coffeehouses across the coun try in the mid-2000s. Named Colorado’s poet laureate in 2023, Gibson toured extensively despite chronic stage fright; published seven books, including Pole Dancing to Gospel Hymns (2008), Pansy (2015), and You Better Be Lightning (2021); and re leased seven albums. After being diagnosed in 2021 with ter minal ovarian cancer, Gibson and their wife, fellow poet Megan Falley, shared their struggle with the disease in the doc umentary film Come See Me in the Good Light , which won the Festival Favorite award at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. Gibson died at age 49 at home in Longmont, Colorado, “surrounded by their wife, Meg, four ex-girlfriends, their mother and father, dozens of friends, and their three beloved dogs,” Falley wrote. N IKKI G IOVANNI was a poet, educator, activist, public intel lectual, and one of the leading lights of the Black Arts Move ment that grew out of the Civil Rights struggle and included
San Francisco’s first mobile needle exchange. She was the first executive director of the Transgender Gender-Variant and Intersex Justice Project until her retirement in 2015 and received the Susan J. Hyde Award for Longevity in the Movement from the National LGBTQ Task Force in 2018. Miss Major died at age 78 at her home in Little Rock, Arkansas. Continued on next page
January–February 2026
5
Made with FlippingBook Ebook Creator